No one ever said they were. They are Natural Law, not mere law. I'm not sure if you've been following this thread, but we have been using the term "law" to refer to statutory, Constitutional, or written law, as opposed to Natural Law. — James Riley
I think of natural law as law because that's what it's called. — Hanover
Nature, as I understand it, adopts nothing; it makes no laws, it simply is, and we're a part of it. We know things and can infer things from our interaction with the rest of Nature, but that doesn't mean that there are laws inherent in it which govern how we should behave in the sense that a law would. — Ciceronianus the White
There certainly isn't a consensus here, hey. — Banno
So... now natural law is law? — Banno
I have not decided on m position yet, but it certainly is not positivism hook line and sinker... — Tobias
Then there is the debates of our Founding Fathers, — James Riley
I'll go get the popcorn. — Banno
I don't imagine they hold much sway in your part of the world, — Banno
However, there was nothing in the written law that prevented him from doing so. In fact the law of inheritance was crystal clear on the issue. The courts invoked a legal principle: "one should not legally benefit from one's own crimes" and withheld the inheritance. If we hold on to the principe of ciceronianus that law is law the courts have acted unlawfully. Did they? even positivists are hard pressed here. Dworkin argued that when law is as lawyers do we have to accept legal principles as a part of law. — Tobias
Too presumptive. — Banno
I haven't maintained that morals and moral principles are never employed in making or interpreting, or enforcing laws. My only point is that doesn't make morals or moral principles law. — Ciceronianus the White
So, Natural law is a set of moral principles. The law is not. Right? — Ciceronianus the White
Once a moral principle is employed in making a law it makes it a law. — James Riley
So, a moral principle becomes a law in that case? — Ciceronianus the White
which means dealing with laws that exist, not laws that I think exist, or should exist. — Ciceronianus the White
Once a moral principle is employed in making a law it makes it a law. — James Riley
All laws of kind have principles from which they are made laws of that kind. It follows there must be at least one principle that makes any law a law, or that makes any law, lawful. — Mww
Which succinctly quantifies the thread title...a law is a law is a law. — Mww
If there was nothing expressly prohibiting the court from ruling as it did, then it seems to me there was nothing prohibiting it from interpreting the law (statute) in such a fashion, e.g., that it would not have an absurd result--one in which a murderer is entitled to the estate of the one he murdered. — Ciceronianus the White
Regardless, though I haven't maintained that morals and moral principles are never employed in making or interpreting, or enforcing laws. My only point is that doesn't make morals or moral principles law. — Ciceronianus the White
It is an oddity of US law. No we never appeal to 'our founding fathers', in fact the Netherlands does not have constitutional review ;) But in the US these people are so revered that what they once wrote is considered to be crucial to interpret current situations. There are huge debates between the originalists who state that the constitution should be interpreted as in light of its original intention and the evolutionists who hold that the constitution should be interpreted as a 'living document', so in light of current times. We do have legislative historical interpretation though where we try to find out what the legislative branch intended with a certain law, but never to the degree of 'originalism'.What do you make of appeals to "our founding fathers"? For example, — Banno
Sorry all, but I must depart this thread to actually practice law, which means dealing with laws that exist, not laws that I think exist, or should exist. It's a useful distinction for a lawyer to make. But not a philosopher, it seems. — Ciceronianus the White
Ah, so, natural law is ridiculous, legal principles are indispensable. — Banno
If we say that law is what lawyers do that let's see what they do, said Ronny Dworkin. When we analyse cases (the famous case Riggs v Palmer, easy to find). In Riggs v Palmer the court argued that a murderer cannot claim the inheriitance of the person he murdered. However, there was nothing in the written law that prevented him from doing so. In fact the law of inheritance was crystal clear on the issue. The courts invoked a legal principle: "one should not legally benefit from one's own crimes" and withheld the inheritance. If we hold on to the principe of ciceronianus that law is law the courts have acted unlawfully. Did they? even positivists are hard pressed here. Dworkin argued that when law is as lawyers do we have to accept legal principles as a part of law. — Tobias
Regardless, though I haven't maintained that morals and moral principles are never employed in making or interpreting, or enforcing laws. My only point is that doesn't make morals or moral principles law. — Ciceronianus the White
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